Image and text provided by University of South Carolina; Columbia, SC

TMBOUT SOUTH KHOUILCurrent Events in the PalmettoState Laconically Recorded.?Teras fever, which is provingquite fatal, is prevalent among thecattle in Chester County.?Cotton blooms too numerous tomention and tobacco leaves of thefinest and broadest type are beingbrought in now all over the State.?Next Thursday, June 26, will beobserved by the Presbyterians generally as a day for fasting on account ofHie low state of piety and for prayerfor an outpouring of the Holy Spirit?The secretary of the United Statestreasury is advertising for proposalsfor a suitable site for the publicbuilding at Georgetown recently authorized by Congress.?Henry M. Johnson, editor of^theChristian. Recorder?a Georgetownnegro?is suing the Pullman PalaceCar Company for $5,000 for refusing togrant him the privileges of a passenger.?On the 8th insianfc Lum Mitchellaccidentally shot and lailed his brother, Jobn Mitchell (both negroes).~ with a pistol supposed to be empty, onMr. B. J. Boylston's place, about 14miles fro in Aiken. "Didn't know itwas loaded."?Proposals relative to a site for thegovernment building at Florencelave been published. A corner lot330x150 foefc is required. Tenders of?ites must be accompanied by a diagram of the land, showing widths ofadjoining; streets and alleys, the grades',and character of foundations attainable, etc.?Among the list, of patents grantedto Southern inventors last week, asreported by C. A. &iow & Co., patient attorneys, Washington, appear thefollowing : J. W. Cade, Due West, sashfastener or holder; J. H. Bast,Charleston, bicycle seat post clamp.?Two young South Carolinians willreceive degrees at Haivard Universitynext Wednesday. They are DonaldMcKay Frost, of Charleston, who willbe made an LL. B,, and Francis Wm.Coker, of Darlington, who* will receiveau A. B. degree. Frost is a oarvardA. B. graduate of< '99 and HCker ofthe North Carolina Uriversity in '99.Both are very popular students.---The town of Kershaw is to have a40-ton co:^on seed oil mill, to cost822,000. The officers are: John T.Stevens, president; S. W. Heath,"vice president ; James M. Carson, secretary; J. F. O'Brien, treasurer andmanager.?S. W. James, a prominent farmer]of the High Hill section, three mileseast of Scranton, was. shot and mortally wounded by his brother-in-law,lu C. Myers. The trouble grow outof a line fence . Myers gave himselfup to the sheriff.?Rev. R. T. Marsh, of RidgeSpring, has accepted a call to thepastorate of Black Creek BaptistChurch, at Dovesville, and has moved-there. This church called Mr. Marshthree years ago, and he declined for~ other fields.. ?John Puckett, a young white man,^wasJaaecT before a Spartan burg magistrate for violating an agriculturalcontract, found guilty and sentencedto pay a fine of $10, but appealed thecase to the circuit court,?General Bonham's condition waspossibly slightly improved Saturdayafternoon. His physician at that. ?iour said his temperature was lower.and that the symptoms were somewhatmore favorable, but h? was still unconscious and delirious.?It is reliably stated that theThoniwell Orphanage, at Clinton, hasreceived a gift of securities worthfully tweny-nve thousand dollars froman unknown New York friend. Thebonds were sent through a Richmondparty, who said that the giver lived in?few York, but wished to keep hisname secret.?L, W. Sossoman, superintendentof the Edgefield cotton mill, who recently went to Atlanta, was on theeve of his departure the recipient of asilver tea service presented by the milloperatives as a token of the high esteem in which he was held. Mr.Sossoman is succeded <by G. H. Spencer, late superintendent of the Tavoracotton mill at Yorkville.?Jasper Toole, a white lad, underthe charge of murder, was tried in theAiken court for the killing of CouncilTyler, at Bath. The solicitor claimedthat Toole had drawn a pistol withthe intent to shoot another lad, Leopard, but the pistol accidentally goingof?in:his" hands and. killing" CountsTyler, he had been;'technically guiltyolmurder, but as it bad not been prov?dthat Toole had previous malice in hisheart against Leopard, he was guHtyof manslaughter. The^^ry'promptlyacquitted him. ^^T" ^,?In order that all the liquor housesof the country may have a showing insecuring some of the trade of the disp?is%rvy'-the State Board4 of Directors-1Has maae the?o?lw?ng anhcuncem??F: iAll bids submitted to the State Board jof Directors for the quarter commencing June 1, chicli - ^j^seet-H^y^msilHinstead of by express, as required bylaw, have, been rejected. As we are Iauthorized by law; to dq>. bidding, is !"hereby reopened to those whose -bidshave been rejected by reason of this ;technical error, and all bids, receivedby expres= through office of State1Treasurer by July 8 will be considered for balance of quarter.?Comptroller General Derham statesthat every dollar of the artificial limbfund has been expended. The law isvery plain upon the subject and manyapplications had to be rejected, because the act stated that no new pensions 'for limbs could be granted- ar:dthat the list had to be confined tothose who received pensions for thesame object under the previous acts.?Francis Snipe, "a bad'negro," ofCharleston, went to the grocery storekept by A. Calvi, an Italian, on upperKing street, Charleston, Saturdaynight, and insolently asked for a bottle of beer. TJpon being refused, hedrew a pistol and was s.bout to shootCalvi, who quickly picked up a pistollying on a shelf and shot the negrothrough the heart, killing him instant- :ly. ' Calvin claims self-defense.?The traveling gang of safe blowers !are still operating in this State, andthe postoffice at Trough, near Pacoletmills, was broken into early Wednes- jday morning. lie safe in the officewas blown. open by dynamite and was ]completely ' wrecked. The burglars ?secured about .fifty cents in coppers, |four dollars worth of postage stamps |and three registered letters and a !money order blank book.?The State summer school forteachers opens at Rock Hill June 25,with Superintendent J. J. McMahanin charge. A good attendance is expected, though many of the SouthCarolina teachers have gone to thesummer school at Knoxviile., Tenn.--Jesse Edwards was killed nearCalhonn mills, in Abbevillle County,by Manuel Wright, in a difficultyabout a cow injuring the crop. Bothare negroes. Wright surrendered. ~?The tram road, two miles aboveChesterfield, from the C. & L. Railroad to Terry Bros. sawmill, a distance of about four miles, is aboutcompleted. An extension is nowbeing built from Terry Bros. ' mill toNew mitt, about two miles further.?Florence expects sell this year between 5,000,000 and 6,000,000 poundsof tobacco. Everything now points tohigher prices.?Portions of Florence and Darlington counties were visited by severehail storms Saturday afternoon, whichdid great damage to growing crops.It is reported that the tobacco fieldson the plantations of Ben Williamsonand A. J. Howard in Darlingtonwere literally ruined.?It is rumored that Mr. ButlerKinard, who was burned in his residence in Newberry, was mnrderd andthe building fired to hide the crime, g?During the services in a coloredchurch near Pisgah, Florence County,Sunday night a negro woman namedKatie Simmons dropped dead fromi heart disease. She had44 got religion"and was " happy on the way. "?The Manufacturers' Record, ofBaltimore, compiles for the past weeka list of twenty-four enterprises char; tered and about to begin husmees hiSouth Carolina. Among them aretwo^oil refineries, six oil mills, threecotton mills, one flour mill, one woodextract plant at Dunbar to extracttar, rosin, creosote, etc, from common pine tree stumps; mercantile,sewerge, lumber and printing plantsconstituting the remainder. The total capital to be invested amounts to$510,000. I?John Bowen, a young unmarriedman, went to Mrs. A. E. Guntershouse, in West Wateree, in KershawCounty, the other day, and offered heian insult. Mrs. Gunter resented itby emptying the contents of a shotgunin his face. A number of shot penetrated his head in and about his eyes.Mrs. Gunter is in jail, awaiting the |result of Bowen's wounds.?Manager Clark, of the Hyatt Parktheatre, Columbia, has just closed acontract for a one-night lecture at thepark some ? time in July with Mrs.Carrie Nation, the famous' saloonsmasher.?There is'a movement on foot toorganize a new county of the northernportions of Greenville and Spartanburg counties. It will include "DarkCorner.?G. Walt Whitman never filed his Ipledgejwith the executive committee,and is consequently ruled out of the Igubernatorial struggle.?Brushy Creek Baptist Church, IGreenville county, will be dedicatedSunday, July 20. Dr. W. J. Langston, of Greenville, will preach the !sermon. The house cost $1,500 andthe seating capacity is 500.?There is a man living not manymiles from Camden who has raised afamily of nine boys, the youngest one \now being about grown and as large jas his father, and a doctor has never 'been called in to see one of them.?A young white man was makinga fine stake out of blind tiger beer atthe Greenville race track, the otherday, until two constables. came alongand broke up the game.?The thirty days preceding theopening of the" dispensary at Yorkvillethe fines imposed by the town councilaggregated $213 : for the thirty daysafter the dispensary opened the finesaggregated $55.?Lexington Dispatch : At the meeting of the Dental Association recently.held in Charleston fellowship -waswithdrawn from several members forunethical conduct in advertising theirbusiness. Apparently there is plentyof work for the fool killer when heagain visits this State.?The coroner of Charleston held aninquest over the body of FrancisSnipe, the negro who was killed inself-defense by A. Calvi, the Italianfruiterer, and the slayer was completely exonerated.m?W JEe_S?8SESTE?.May Succeed Koester as Collectorof laterna! Revenue.President Roosevelt contemplatesappointing itfajor Micah Jenkins colJector.pf internal, revenue in..place.of-C-eorge rtoester, writes, the \>"ashington correspondent^ of the CharlestonNews and Courier, whose nominationis now hung up in the Senate without j- i?e-sehtest prospect of confirmation.I am also informed, upon unquestion- jable authority, that the President is :.seriously considering the proprietv1of reappoir.tins William L. Karri's!postmaster at Charleston.. It has been known for some timepast that- George Koester's nomination as collector of internal revenuecould not be confirmed by the Senate.The ' personal opposition of SenatorTillinan to Koester has been si ven outas the principal reason why his nomination has been held up in*th<- fi-ancecommittee so long. The real reasonis that the colored Republicans jthroughout the country have organizeda formidable protest against Koester.which the Republican Senators areafraid to ignore. Therefore the President does not feel wilUing to insistupon retaining Koester in the servicein defiance of tho political forces arrayed against him.The King Edward coronation cere-,monies begin this week. The galadays to which London and a good dealof the rest of the world has lookedforward to and planned for with theutmost zest are at hand. It is to behoped that they will signalize the beginning of an enlightened reign thatwill usher in a brighter epoch forGreat Britain and her varions depend- ]encies, stricken South Africa amfcrc jthe numiber. ^A-HfcDISPENSERS I PRIMARY.Their Election Thus Prohibited,but Some Counties Disobey.The State Democratic convention atits recent session passed a rule thatmembers of county boards of controland dispeners should not be voted forin the primary.. Notwithstanding this,one or two county committees havemade provision for holding suchelections?one of them is Edgefield,and it is stated that such electionswill be held in that county, the convention rule to the contrary notwithstanding.The plan was also mooted in Aiken,but it has not been adopted. Chairman Wilie Jones, in reply to ChairmanThorpe, of Aiken, says :"Article 6 of the constitution of theDemocratic party prohibits the nomination in the primary of members ofthe county board of control and county dispensers. I do not think that itwould be according to the constitutionto allow a ballot box to be voted for asan expxression of opinion. It wouldundoutedly be contrary to the consti- [tution, and I therefore rule that itcannot be done. "On the advice of Senator Hanna,who is too astute a politician not toappreciate the baneful effect on hisparty ?f the continued suppression offacts and figures by the war department, Secretary Boot has made public the cost of the Phiff?ppine warup to the first of May. By the mostconservative methods of figuringwhich the Secretary could command,the total now aggregates $170,326,586.These figures, large as they are, donot however, tell tbe whole story.Mr. Root, of course, makes no mention of the $20,000,000 originally paidto Spain, nor has he any way of figuring that portion of the cost which hasbeen incurred by the navy department, and which is not small. LastMay, however, the secretary of thenavy threw some light on the situation by sending to Congress a statement, the total of which aggregated,in round numbers, 820,000,000. It;may, therefore, be safely stated thatthe Philippine Islands have cost thiscountry, up to date, $210,000,000,which would mean, exclusive of thepurchase price, an annual expenditureof $50,000,00t. So-stupendous arethese figures that they convey but little to the mind of the average man,but when it is calculated that the islands have cost every man in theUnited States $3, or, to the breadwinner who has five mouths to feed,$15, some conception of the expense ofbeing a "world power" can be arrivedat.Senor Gonzales de Quesada, thenew Cuban Minister, has been regularly escorted to the White House bySecretary Hay and presented, withhis credentials, to President Roosevelt. Diplomatic relations betweeenthe two countries have, therefore,been properly launched.An elevator in a Broome street,New York, building fell a distance ofsix stories, one day recently, withtwenty-six persons in it. Eleven ofthe paassengers were injured, but thewonder is that any of them escapedwith their lives after such a plunge asthat.Here is an idea for Sumter countycandidates : A candidate out West carries a good plow hand on his rounds.When he wishes to talk to a farmer helets his friend take charge of the teamand keep the plow going. The farmeris generally willing- to talk severalhours while the "sub" is plowing.A good many married women haveread with delight that a young womanin the state of New York has beensentenced for 60 days in jail for flirtingwith another woman's husband. Theywould have been still more delightedhad the sentence been imprisonmentfor life.If a spinster isn't as tall as shewould like to be she should get spliced.?Dispensers for the towns of LakeCity and Scranton will be elected bythe Williamsburg board of control onJuly 5.II I II II. -Tennyson nmi Darsam.Tennyson was extremely eager at onetime to visit America, and touchiug thispoint a story is related to the effectthat Barnum offered him an enormoussum to make the trip, though probabl5not as one of the attractions of the"greatest - show on earth." "All youhave to c!ov" said Bnrnum. "is to standon a pkU forra and have your KimUsjwell sunken."- The poet. However. dV jclined the tempting offer.Courtship Too fcx;>enslve.less?You don't mean say theyhave broken off their engagementsJess?Yes.Tess-Why, i thought they wve perfectly devoted to each other.Jess?So they are. Yon see. :i.'\vhave broken off the engagement,that he may save enough money to enable them to get married.?Philadelphia Press._Vben Berrlnj?a Were P?en?jr.In former days herrings were soabundant in Newfoundland waters tl atthe most wanton slaughter of t'in-ii:was permitted without any restrictionwhatever. Seines were allowed to retain 1.000 or 2.000 barrels of the Ssbuntil they perished, and then the neiwas freed, and the whole contents fellto the bottom to pollute the ocean formiles around. When a poaching smackwas captured, the herrings It had onboard were all thrown into the sea. andfrequently boats- when chased resortedto the same means to get rid of incriminating evidence. The fish then fetched?nly 50 cents a barrel of 500 herrings,or ten for a cent?Cleveland PlainDealer.ANIMAL IMITATIVENESS.I u Begpir's Dos Groove to BeLike Hie Master."One of the most curious traits to befound in the animal nature," said anobservant citizen, "is that which growsout of the unconscious Imitativeness ofcreatures of the lower order. I haveobserved many instances of where thecreatures of a lower order have takenon the characteristics in some noticeable degree of members of the humanfamily. One might know, for instance,the beggar's dog from the look of thedog, from the droop of the eye, the pathetic hang of the lip and a certain general air of despondency and hopelessness which seems to speak in the verynature of the animal. I mention thebeggar's dog because it is a familiarexample. The beggar's dog never lookscheerful, never smiles, never frohes,but simply sits by his master andbroods and begs for whatever charitymay give."I have seen the dog character molded under happier influences, and thedog became more" cheerful. He was alight hearted, free and easy sort ofcreature and seemed to get somethingof the sunnier side of things. I am almost tempted to say that if you willshow me a man's dog I will tell youwhat 'manner of man the owner is,with particular reference to temperament and his moods. Th? melancholyman. tibe mau who grovels mentallyalong the gloomier groves, the pessimistic man who is always looking atthe darle side of th? picture, ail the menwho come within these unhappy classifications rarely own a cheerful dog.The dog unconsciously takes to theways of the master and In his moodsImitates the master's way of thinking."But turn to the dog of the jolly,cheerful fellow. Watch him show histeeth in laughter when the master approaches. He is darting across theyard and dancing and frisking aroundthe master's feet in the happiest wayimaginable, and he is up to all kinds ofpranks and does all kinds of littlethings to indicate the good nature thatis in him. He does as his master doesand seems to take the same generalview of life. These are small things, Iguess, but they show just how important one's way of thinking may influence one's dog and change his* wholeview of life."?New Orleans TimesDemocratBarxnese Ambition.The highest ambition of a Burman'slife is to build a pagoda, by which hewins the title of Kyanng Taga duringthis incarnation and secures a mortgage on Nirvana. A Burman does notbecome a Christian easily,^ but whenhe does he brings with him the conviction he had as a Buddhist that to builda place of worship is the most meritorious act of a man's life.This accounts for the present cathedral of Mandalay, built at a cost of00,000 rupees by Kyanng Taga PaulObon, a Burmese ruby merchant ofthat city. The old church of Amarapura was built by an Armenian and thetwo churches of the Tennessarim coastby a gentleman named De Castro.Many of the 700 and more chapelsand churches throughout Burma arebuilt of jungle wood, which is destroyed in a few years by the white ants.To replace them by teak or pyingkado,not to speak of mo\lest structures, is amatter of hope with every priest, butin their straitened finances they dothe best they can and.pray for KyanngTages to came along.?Donahoe's Magazine.?'!Xo Interference."There is one thing anarchists will notconsent to, one thing they rebel against(at least in thought, and sometimes inact), and that is anybody's assumptionto rule another, whether it be czar,king, nobility or a democrat majority,says William M. Salter in The Atlantic.They are disagreed about many thiugs.There are individualist anarchists andsocialist (or communist) anarchists, believers in private property and believers in common property, but all alikebelieve in self rule, and they are as muchopposed to democratic state socialismas to state socialism of any kind. Theybelieve that power intoxicates the bestof men and are not willing to allow itin any form. "No master, high or low,"they say," after William Morris. "Letlife shape itself." "Mind your own business," "No interference"?such is theirdemand.The Great Vaine of Saving: Time.Thrift of time is as necessary asthrift of money, and he who knowshow t? save time has learned the secret of accumulating educational opportunity. Men who regard it as sinful to waste money waste time witha prodigal's lavishrress because theydo not- understand the value of shortperiods of time. Society is full of people who might enrich themselves ahundredfold and make their lives immensely more interesting if they learned this commonplace truth.?Ladies"Home Journal.The Word Treacle.j The word treacle has undergone an :i odd modification. At iirst it was applied ?i to such decoctions of roots or other sub- ;stances ;?s wore deemed beneficial in Jmedical practice: then, as these were jfrequently sweetened, it came to mean !any sweet concoction or confection, jand lastly. ::s molasses was the sweet- jest of all, this name was exclusively iapplied to sirup.?!oI;>in?; a Fellovsr Out.He (who stutters badly)?1 lul-lul- jlove you mum-mum?I lul-!o?"e you jmum-mum-more than tut-tut-tongue ;can tut-tut?more than tut-tut-tongue |can tut-tut?She (eagerly)?Don't you know the ideaf and dumb alphabet?Were I to speak my erhole mind Ishould dare to say that '?en are made jfor laughter and women for tears.?La IC?a viere, "The ArtjDjMLrfe.". ISTICK TO ONE THING.A Man Who Wishes Be Had LivedUp to That Rule."The only way for a man on a salaryto make a success of life financiallyand otherwise is to stick to one thing."said a government employee to a reporter. "Twenty years ago I had plentyof energy, a little money and a hugestock of ideas. I determined to becomea power in the money market and as astarter dabbled for six months or morein stocks. That experience cost me $4,.000. I soon became convinced that Iwas cut out for a druggist and straightway invested $2,000 in a pharmacy.Cut rates were unknown in those days,and in a short time I was doing well,but one day I read of a prominent lawyer receiving $25,000 as a fee for somecase, and instantly I became imbuedwith the idea that I would make agreat lawyer. I neglected my drugbusiness to such an extent that in twoyears I was $500 to the bad. In themeantime I read law diligently. Alftera time I graduated as a full fledged disciple of Blackstone a:ad hung out myshingle. Business not coming my wayas fast as I thought it should, I openeda small hotel; result, $1,300 in the hole."Then I tried my hand at real estate,my legal training helping, me greatly,but the same old story will have to berecorded here?failure. By this time mymoney was nearly all gone. What to donext was the all absorbing Question,One day a friend convinced me thatbfe money could be made out of chickens; I invested every cent I had left,$1,200, in hens. At the end of sixmonths I sold out my hennery for $300.Then I got a government job; an?l hereI've been ever since. Shortly after myarrivai in this town I purchased a little land in the northwest section. Thatinvestment has yielded me a ^eryhandsome return, and ? am now thoroughly satisfied that the only thing fora man on a salary to do is to either puta little each month in some good savings bank or invest his surplus in landor bricks and mortar. Remember onething?tills is an age of specialistsStick to one thing, make a success ofit and maybe one of these days somebig company will offer you a princelysalary for your knowledge. A rollingstone gathers no moss or money."?Washington Star.The Florin.The florin, one of the most famous ofmodern coins, originated in Florence.Some say that it gave the name to thecity, while others assert that it wasfirst so called because it had on it aflower-de-luce, from the Italian fiorone,or "flower," for the same reason thatan English silver piece is called a"crown," or certain goldpieces inFrance indifferently a "napoleon" or a"louis," or the ten dollar goldpiece inAmerica an "eagle."Two countries, Austria and Holland,have retained the florin as a unit o.'monetary value, taking it at a tim<when it was very universal in Europe,its usage having been rendered generalby the financial supremacy of the littlestates of northern Italy and the imperfect coinage system of the other countries of the continentPhysical Formation of Mexico.Mexico possesses a curious physicalformation. Rising rapidly by a succession of terraces from the low, sandycoasts on the east and west, ic culminates in a central plateau, running ina northwesterly and southeasterly direction and having an elevation Vary1 ing from 4,000 to S.000 feet above thesea. High above this plateau towerthe snow capped crests of several volcanoes, most of which are extinct.Ten of them are over 12.000 feet inheight and three look down upon fertile valleys from altitudes of 17.7S2.17.350 and 10.000. These are Popocatepetl. Orizaba and Ixtaccihuatl.'The Voice of Experience.Young Father?I've just made a bigdeposit in a savings bank in trust formy baby boy. When he is twenty-one, )I will band him the bankbook, tell him jthe amount, of the original deposit and jlet him see how things count up atcompound interestOld Gentleman?Won't pay. ? triedthat My boy drew the money and gotmarried with it, and now I've got tosupport him and his wife and eightchildren.Cheese.Cheese may generally be classifiedas hard and soft and the differentvarieties are obtained by varying theproportions of cream. When made o/cream alone and'at a low temperaturewith little pressure, we have' the softor "cream chooses. These must be usedwhile comparatively fresh, as theysoon decompose and become rancid.Pto?omy's Xnpti??l Ync?rt.Ptolemy PhiJopatcr possessed a nuptial yacet. the Thalamegon, 312 feetlong ana 45 foot deep. A graceful gallery supported by curiously carved columns rati round the vessel, and withinwore fempies of Venus and of Bacchus.Eer masts were 100 feet high, and hersails?ivA cordage of royal purple hue.A Zttntton Chop.Before cooking a mutton chop for aninvalid plunge the meat into boiling jwater for about two minutes. By do- jing so the albumen in the meat forms ja white covering ou the outside and ?prevents the gravy from running out jduring the process of cooking.I?er Sad Predicament."She says she'll have to have a newbonnet before she can sing in thechoir.""Well?""Well, he says that she'll have tosing in the choir to get the money for anew bonnet."?Chicago PostI?ad a Chance.Mother?Do you think that youngman has saved anything?Daughter?Undoubtedly, ma. He sayshe has never loved before.The BestPaperPublished in the United States for Democrats and for all readers is theTwice-a-WeekCourier-JournalThe equal of many dailes and the eoperior of all other semi-weeklies or weeklies.Issued Wednesday and Saturday. 104copies a year, and you get it for only$1.00 A YEAR.The Wednesday issue is devoted to NewsMatter, the Saturday issue to Home MattersA liberal commission to agents. Sam?lecopies cheerfully sent free to all who willask for them. AvritetoCOURIER-JOURNAL CO.,Louisville, Ky.3y special arrangement you can getTHE WATCHMAN AKI SfliTMAND THETWI?E-?-WEE? BOBRIEjWOUSMBoth one year for onlyS2.00.This Is for cash subscriptions only. AUsubscriptions under this combination offermust be sent through the Watchman andSouthron office, nov 20- -Land Surveying.I will give prompt attention to all callsfor surveying, platting, terracmg.hill sides,draining bottoms, &c.BAKES E. 0 , D. S.,Oct 19?o Catchail, S. 0.69? AND LOCKSMITH.I take pleasure in giving notice to my friends and the public generally, that, having regained my health, I have, reopened my shop, and am readyto do any work in theline of Guns, Locks, SewingMachines, &c. Prices reasonable, work done promptly andsatisfaction guaranteed. Shopon Liberty street a few doorseast of Main.Mch 5 R. S. BR AD WELL?ion&western Railroad,TIME TABLE NO. 2.In effect Sunday, May 25, 1902, at 6 a mBetween Wilson's Mill and Sumter.No 73 STATIONS No 72m - m300 % Le Sumter Ar 12 013l>3 Summerton Junction 1157317 Tindal 112?3 30 Packsville M 004 05 Silver 10 35415 Mm&?? 10154 40 -uiuaru 9525 00 Sumrcerton 9 475 45 Davis 9 346 00 Jordan -9 226 45 *Ar Wilson's Mili Le 905m amBetween Millard and St Paul.73 75 ? STATIONS 72 l?pm am am pm4 15 9 52 Le Millard' Ar 1015 4 404 20 10 02 ?Ar St Paul Le 10 05 4 30Between'Sumter and Camden.Southbound Trains. Northbound Trains.69 71 STATIONS 70 68pm am am pm5 36 10 20 ?Le Sumter Ar 9 00 o 456 3S 10 02 NW Junction S 5?5 5 436 5S 1022 Dalzeil S 25 512716 1032 Borden SOO 4 57 36 1042 Remberts 7 40 4 437 46 10 47 Ellerbee 7 30 4 38S 05 1115 Sou By. Jnction 710 4 25S 15 11 25 ?Ar Camden Le 7 00 415(SC & G Ex Depot)HOS. WILSON. President.I_ATLANTIC COAST UNE R. R. CO.Condensed Schedule.TRAINS GOING SOUTH.Dated May 25, ?02. [ No 55 | No 35 { No 51pm amLeave Wilmington *3 45 +6 00Leave Marion '"55 S 45Arrive Florence 50 . 9 25pm amLeave Florence **15? *345Arrive Sumter 9 30 4 4^No b'2pm amLeave Sumter ft 30 *9 50Arrive Columbia 10 55 11 10No. >'2 runs through from Charleston viaCentnil R. K.. leaving Charleston 6 40 a.m.,Lanes S 15 a. m.. Manning- S 57 a. a.?TRAINS GOING NORTH.No 54 No 53 ; No 50am pin pmLeave Colufnbia \>55 *4 55Arrive Sumter s-O' 6 15No 32am pm ?Leave Sumtes S 20 "*6 35Arrive Florence '.'35 7 50 -7-55amLeave Florence. ion) ??30Leajre Marion 10 53 9 09Arrive Wilmington " 1 40_il 45*Daily. "Daily except Sunday.No. S3 runs < hrotigh to Charleston. S. C yiaCentral . K.. arriving Manning 053p. m..Lanes 35 o? m.. Charleston 8 20 p. m.Trains o? Con way Branch leaveCbadbonrn?2 01 p. m'.. arriveConway 2 CO p. rn.; returningleave Conway 2 55 p. m.. arrive Chadbourn5 ?? p. m. leave Chaabourn 5 35 p. m.. arriveElrixl s 20 p. m.. returnit?g teave El rod s 40 a.m.. arrive Chadbourn 1125 a. m. Daily except Sunday. _ . .. M. EMERSON.Gen'l ss. AgentJ. . KENLY, Gen'l Manager.T. M. Emerson. Traffic Manager.SOUTHERN BY. SCHEDULE.Leave Charleston, 7 a. m.; Arrive Sumter. 11.50 ?.. m.Leave Columbia, 7.00 a. m.; Arrive Sumter. 11.50 a. m.Leave Columbia. 3.10 p. m.: Arrive Sumter, 5.15 p. m.Leave Camden. 7.30 a. m.; Arrive Sumter, 11.50 a. m.Leave Sumter, S.45 a. m."; Arrive Columbia, 11.15 a. m.; Arrive Camden, 11.25 a. mLeave Sumter, 2.20 p. m.; Arrive Charleston, 7.30 p. m.